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Pediatric Radiology at the Millennium1

Howard Paul Forman, MD, MBA, Jeffrey Traubici, MD 2, Anne M. Covey, MD 3, Daniel S. Kamin, MD 4, John C. Leonidas, MD and Jonathan H. Sunshine, PhD

1 From the Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar St, SP2-332, New Haven, CT 06520 (H.P.F., J.T., A.M.C., D.S.K.); the Department of Economics, Yale College, New Haven, Conn (H.P.F.); the Department of Radiology, Schneider Children’s Hospital, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, New Hyde Park, NY (J.C.L.); and the Department of Research, American College of Radiology, Reston, Va (J.S.S.). From the 1998 RSNA scientific assembly. Received August 2, 2000; revision requested September 13; final revision received January 9, 2001; accepted February 6. Supported in part by the American College of Radiology Research Bureau. Address correspondence to H.P.F. (e-mail: howard.forman@yale.edu).



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Figure 1. Graph shows the help-wanted index of pediatric radiology from 1991 to 1999. The raw data are represented by the bars, and the 12-month rolling average is represented by the connected line of diamonds. The first 11 months are an average of the first months in the series because data were available for only 11 months of the 1st year. Note that the most recent raw numbers have exceeded the previous peak from 1992, whereas the rolling average is approaching this peak.

 


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Figure 2. Graph shows the 12-month rolling average of academic ({blacksquare}) and private ({blacktriangleup}) advertisements from 1991 to 1999. Note the relatively outsized increases in advertisements for academic positions during the last year, which is similar to that for 1992.

 





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